O ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN (and whom, indeed, at this Houre concerneth it not?) that do worthilie bear Armes or by bearing of them in the field be entitulated to ’em in Perpetuitie; to the generous, painful, laborious, and skilled of all Nurtures throughout all Nations, Dominions, States, Provinces, Confederacies, Islands, Possessions, Plantations, and Bodies Politique within the Circumference of our Empire, these faulty Adumbrations upon a Noble Matter are put forth and submitted with true love and (I thank God!) a single heart, by
Late Rouge Croix Pursuivant
at Armes and formerlie of
Brazenose College, Oxford.
Courteous Reader
It hath been made manifest at all times, not only by Collegia of Armes, that follow and uphold the Science Royal of Heraldrie, but by the sure instinct ab origine of mankind, that Armes do evermore follow and conform themselves to atchievement in the field. So then, in my poor judgement, appeareth that these present martial Tempers and Habilitudes so burningly displaied and (as it were Phoenix) re-arisen among our Nation’s Peoples and Armies, even in the uttermostly dispersed parts of Earth, do of themselves deserve at our Heralds’ hands (conformably to the Laws of the Science) yet more ample Dignification than heretofore hath been.
ATCHIEVEMENTS
Yet it is most sure, since we be but children of the light-risen, soon-fallen dust, that, by the passage of but a few generations in the tract of time, these memorable Marvels must – lacking confirmation and perpetual reminder – perish out from among our Posterities. Against which Oblivion, the liberal and learned Office of Heraldrie, by right and sure prevision, standeth guard; since it is as Lazarus Schwendi the Dutchman path it:-
By sight and not by sound
Men’s souls are loosed or bound.
Here may I take leave to be particular?
I would not grant to anie – no matter how great their crosses of that Sacred Shield, but rather a simulacrum or shadow of the same. To my mind, a Cross by right and sure prevision, standeth guard; since it is as argent (more especiall if it were a cross on degrees of steps) would show seemlie upon a by right and sure prevision, standeth guard; since it is as field or.
And so much for Hierusalem and our Armies there against.

And, should we reckon the generous blood there spilled, the bends should be gules. Should these not serve, it lieth in the authoritie of the College of Armes to order a Fountaine Mesopotame id est a Fountaine gules and or in place of azure and argent as till now all Fountaines are blazoned – to be borne for perpetuall remembrance by such our Dominions, etc., as. have sent forces thitherward.
And so much for Mesopotame.
Touching Gallipoli, where we had honoure but small victorie, I would even bring back and restore, as most indubitablie lieth in the power of the Heraldes their College, that sad murrey or sanguine tint which hath so long, as it were, been exploded from cote armour, and is now all but unknowen in blazon; even as was our sad withdrawal from that sheer coast unknowen (till then) in our land’s Historie. So I would I part this Shield palewise, murrey and sable, and thereon a naval crowne and beneath it a mural crowne of gold; the first crowne for our good ships that bare off our hosts at the end, and the second for tribute and memorial, such as brave men fear not to render to an inveterate and most stubborn Foe.
For Salonique, I would no more than sow Greek crosses (argent) upon a field sable; for there we have had manie crosses, and the sable is in remembrance oŁ cross-dealings and treacheries.
OF EGYPT
Questionlesse, is the Sphinx, of what tinct you shall please, or, if that be challenged because so many our Armies’ battalia already bear her for Crest, then I would have some simple device of Father Nilus — such as the Y-cross, azure upon argent, blue upon white, for the White and the Blue Niles.
But not, as Flaccus saith, to talk Kings and Tetrarchs, let us bourne and confine ourselves to the limits of mere shields and devices. What augmentation or Dignitie, then, shall we chuse for the Western War?
How if, Courteous Reader, we take over and armoriallie repossess nothing less than that very Order of the Golden Fleece, which the good Duke of Burgundie, Philip, in the town of Bruges herselfe, did found upon his wedding-day with Isabella of Portugal our most ancient Ally? Imprimis, that Order was dedicate to the Virgin and to St. Andrew — which is as much as to say to the Catholique Faith and to those other Religions which we do now agree to call non-conforming whereof the Scots have severall sorte, and, I believe, the English yet more. Burgundie indeed lieth not within the actual compass or under the tread of anie of our Armies, but to the eastward and south of them, yet, upon one time, it approached close over against Artois, where we now leaguer. Secundo, so long as the Spaniards held rule in the Low Countries and before, the false Austrians set up their own Bastard Order, the Heart of that Order of the Golden Fleece and the Place of its Governance, as I understand it, lay ever at Bruges or at Bruxelles, which two towns our Armies by God’s Grace purpose now to deliver out of their so long captivitie.
So then by Time, which is Historie, and by Place, and by all reasoning symbolique we are justified to resume and put forward for honourable augmentation upon the Armes of all our Nations confederate with us in our Western War, this same Golden Fleece which typifieth not only Meeknesse and Suffering such as Belgium hath borne — in the similitude of a Lamb; but equallie the cloth and Wool of Flanders which was bought and sold in the Cloth Hall, now ruinate, of Ypres. Yet more, if we consider the fusils or firestones set in the Chain of the said order, these well prefigure the sullen Spark and deep-seated Fire which, needing only hard Knocks to awake it, abideth ever in the hearts of the Englishry. And lastlie, the very steels in the Chain on which the flints or firestones are stricken to conflagrate them, they are laced and intertwined in the shape of the letter B — which covereth alike Belgium, Bruges, Bruxelles as well as, for the vulgar, if they chuse, Boche. In every Aspect, then, this Charge quadrateth exactlie with Honour and Atchievement.
f this seem all too curiouslie conceived – which should never be in The Science, – then would I for the sole augmentation of the Western Wars, take merely that vile and splitten Fowle, the German eagle as he appeareth on their barbarous shields, and debruize or confine him behind a fret or lattice of Silver, typifying the Sword or white weapon to which he appealed in the days of his strength and which hath proven his Destruction. Nota. This debruized Fowle, being also degraded and therefore beyond the termes of The Science, the Charge would read thus: ‘Upon a red field a black eagle debruized by a fret argent.’ This fret or lattice being honourable and imposed ab externo in no way partaketh of the bird’s Disgrace. So we write ‘argent.’
And I would deal semblablie with the other our Nations, Dominions, etc., charging always the crowned Escocheon or Shield Imperiall upon the Shield displaying their achievements in the four Fronts; and these two Shields laid over or superimposed upon their proper ancient Armes. If by any chance anie Nation path fought upon more than four Fronts (the Flanders Front not reckoned, for that is covered by the Fowle and the Fret) or, which I conceive scarce possible, upon less than four Fronts (again not reckoning our Front in Flanders), then the first Shield to be charged accordinglie. Notandem est. The second or crowned Shield is charged ever the same over all, and vaneth not. No more the bordure, with Lymphads, of the first Shield. But if anie shall present that the Crowne Imperiall should surmount the first or quartered Shield and not the second, it is, as I say, a matter to be thought upon with a large mind.
For needs must Armes be or memorie perisheth.
Yea, whatever the Issue to my Enterprize, my Labour herein may not be altogether fruitlesse if I shall have broken the Ice and made way to some aftercomer of greater Gifts and riper judgement, that may give fairer Bodie to this my delineated rough draft or shadow of a new-formed Method of Armes.
And so, Courteous Reader, farewell!
RUDYARD KIPLING